Saturday, December 9, 2017

JUDICIAL WATCH - IN THE NEWS 12/09/2017 DID A CORRUPT FBI GIVE HILLARY A 'FREE PASS?'


Conservatives ramp up attacks on Mueller
(The Hill) The House Intelligence Committee is seeking answers from the special counsel about the circumstances surrounding Strzok’s reassignment from high-profile investigator on the special counsel to the FBI’s human resources department. Meanwhile, the conservative group Judicial Watch is suing to obtain Strzok’s text messages.
READ MORE
Did A Corrupt FBI Give Hillary Clinton A Free Pass? Sure Looks Like It
(Investors Business Daily) Among the many troubling revelations to have emerged regarding the FBI these days, one of the worst is finding out that an avowed Trump-hater softened language in a memo to exonerate Hillary Clinton.

"These new FBI documents show the FBI was more concerned about a whistleblower who told the truth about the infamous Clinton-Lynch tarmac meeting than the scandalous meeting itself," said Tom Fitton, president of Judicial Watch, which uncovered the memos, adding that they "show the FBI worked to make sure no more details of the meeting would be revealed to the American people."
READ MORE
Judicial Watch Lawsuit Would Force FBI To Release FBI Agent’s Anti-Trump Messages
(The Daily Caller) A lawsuit filed by watchdog organization Judicial Watch would force the FBI to release the disparaging messages about President Donald Trump that a top FBI agent on the Russia investigation exchanged with an FBI lawyer on the same investigation. Those messages forced Special Counsel Robert Mueller to kick the investigator, Peter Strzok, off of the Russia investigation, after the Department of Justice’s inspector general brought them to Mueller’s attention. Strzok played a leading role in both the Russia investigation as well as the investigation into Hillary Clinton’s private email server.
READ MORE
Five Things to Know About Anti-Trump FBI Agent Peter Strzok
(Breitbart) FBI Special Counsel Robert Mueller’s Russia investigation is under intense scrutiny after it was revealed that he dismissed investigator Peter Strzok for anti-Trump texts he sent to a fellow employee — a revelation that has fueled concerns of bias at the FBI.
READ MORE
Justice Department emails reveal support for Sally Yates after she refused to enforce Trump's travel ban
(Business Insider) A Freedom of Information Act (FOIA) request and subsequent lawsuit filed against the US Justice Department for the release of former acting Attorney General Sally Yates' emails revealed mess, including a prominent prosecutor who praised Yates' decision not to enforcePresident Donald Trump's controversial travel ban earlier this year.

Judicial Watch released emails sent from multiple Justice Department employees to Yates during her tenure as acting attorney general in the first week of the Trump administration. On January 27, Trump implemented an executive order intended to temporarily bar refugees and people from seven majority-Muslim countries from entering the US.
READ MORE

No comments:

Post a Comment